Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:04 p.m. No.22739483   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9554 >>9592 >>9634

85% of violent perps are set free in NYC

 

These are the worst — and wokest — judges in New York City when it comes to protecting the public from violent suspects.

 

These criminal court jurists set violent offenders loose ahead of trial at an astounding rate — with some springing alleged perps more than 80% of the time, according to a Post analysis of pretrial detention data from the Office of Court Administration.

 

The analysis looked at 96 judges who handled a minimum of 25 cases in the first six months of 2024 where the top charge at arraignment was a violent felony. Nearly all such cases are still bail-eligible, even after radical criminal-justice reforms were enacted by Albany lawmakers in 2019.

 

One of the city’s most egregious practitioners of this junk justice is Queens Criminal Court Judge Wanda Licitra, who only set bail five times and had no suspects held in pretrial detention in 34 violent felony cases spanning January to June 2024, the latest available data.

 

Licitra even set loose a feces fiend accused of smashing poop into a straphanger’s face on a subway platform — who cursed her out in court to boot.

 

“Judges like that, we call them judges who drink the Kool Aid, because instead of them focusing on the actual situation, they’re drinking the Kool Aid of bail reform,” one veteran criminal defense attorney who has repeatedly gone before Licitra told The Post.

 

Such jurists’ “broad ideological slide” toward opposing incarceration is endangering New Yorkers’ lives, said Hannah E. Meyers, a fellow and director of policing and public safety at the Manhattan Institute.

 

Many of these judges are “letting out dangerous people even when they know those people are dangerous and they’re failing to be responsible in those situations and safety of others,” she said.

 

Judges have bemoaned their hands are tied when deciding to set bail, citing how New York is the only state where jurists only can weigh whether a person will return to court, with zero consideration for whether they’re a public safety threat.

 

Yet criminal defense attorney Thomas Kenniff, who ran as a Republican against Alvin Bragg for Manhattan district attorney, stressed there are “many” ways to justify holding a violent perp on bail.

 

“Even when you can’t rely on the public safety criteria because of the dysfunctional laws in the state [to set bail], chances are you can get there some other way.”

 

An OCA spokesperson said the administration does not comment on bail decisions, but said judges “have discretion in making bail decisions in accordance with the law and based solely on an individualized assessment of a defendant’s risk of flight.”

 

None of the following judges responded to requests for comment.

 

https://nypost.com/2025/03/08/us-news/woke-nyc-judges-refuse-to-set-bail-or-pretrial-detention-for-dangerous-perps/

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:07 p.m. No.22739490   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9511 >>9592 >>9634

House to vote on CR stopgap Tuesday, then send members home. Johnson can only lose 3 votes.

 

Mike Johnson to Chuck Schumer on government funding: Your move.

 

House Republicans are pushing a not-so-clean spending patch through September that would add billions of dollars for deportations, veterans’ health care and the military — and cut $13 billion in funding for non-defense programs. The speaker is planning to put the stopgap, known as a continuing resolution or a CR, on the floor Tuesday, and then send members home for recess before the Senate can send back any changes.

 

Johnson is hoping to get the CR through the House without relying on Democratic votes (House Democratic leaders reaffirmed Saturday that they’re a “no”). President Donald Trump is publicly pushing GOP lawmakers to fall in line, but Johnson’s still got a few Republican holdouts. Rep. Thomas Massie is a no. And we’re keeping an eye on Reps. Tony Gonzales, who said Sunday on CNN that he’ll make a “game-time decision;” Brian Fitzpatrick, who told CBS he’s undecided; and Cory Mills, who is also on the fence.

 

But the spending patch can’t get through the Senate without the help of at least eight Democrats, given expected opposition from GOP Sen. Rand Paul. And that’s putting Schumer in a bind.

 

The Senate minority leader and his House counterpart are both under pressure from within their party to do more to stop Trump and Elon Musk’s unilateral cuts to federal programs. Hakeem Jeffries’ caucus can likely oppose the spending patch en masse without prompting a shutdown, but Schumer doesn’t have the same cover. Senate Democrats will have to decide whether they’ll push back on Trump and force a shutdown, or stand down to keep the government running. Johnson’s already trying to cast any lapse in funding as a “Chuck Schumer shutdown.”

 

Some Senate Democrats seemed open last week to supporting a clean CR. But Sen. Patty Murray, the top Democrat on Senate Appropriations, slammed House Republicans’ weekend proposal as a “slush fund” that would give Trump and Musk “more power over federal spending.” She continued to call for a shorter spending patch to give appropriators time to finish the full funding bills — an outcome also favored by Murray's GOP counterpart, Sen. Susan Collins.

 

And swing-state Sen. Elissa Slotkin told NBC News she’d “withhold” her vote unless she gets “assurances that whatever we pass … is going to ensure that the money is spent the way Congress intends.” Sen. Tim Kaine posted on X that he's a "hell no" on the bill.

 

What else we’re watching:

 

Tax Talk: House Ways and Means Republicans will meet today to start drafting the tax portion of the GOP’s party-line bill. The session is expected to last all day and will be followed by a second meeting on Wednesday. Committee members will have to hash out how to extend Trump’s expiring tax cuts in addition to fulfilling Trump’s campaign promises like no taxes on tips or overtime.

Rules: The Rules Committee will have a hearing on advancing the stopgap funding bill and other legislation at 4 p.m. It’s expected to clear the panel, setting up a vote on the spending bill on Tuesday.

 

https://www.politico.com/live-updates/2025/03/10/congress/johnson-shutdown-schumer-congress-00220158

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:10 p.m. No.22739501   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9520 >>9592 >>9634

Kristi Noem turns CBP One app into self-deportation tool that will automatically update

 

The Trump administration is rolling out a new app to replace the controversial CBP One app with the new replacement designed to facilitate the self-deportation of illegal immigrants.

 

The Department of Homeland Security is announcing the CBP Home app – which will launch with a self-deportation reporting feature for those in the country illegally.

 

It replaces the CBP One app, which was expanded by the Biden administration to allow migrants to schedule appointments at ports of entry to be paroled into the U.S. Hundreds of thousands were paroled into the U.S. as a result. The Trump administration has ended the ability to use the app for that purpose.

 

All CBP One apps will update to the new CBP Home app.

 

"The Biden Administration exploited the CBP One App to allow more than 1 million aliens to illegally enter the United States. With the launching of the CBP Home App, we are restoring integrity to our immigration system," DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement.

 

The app allows aliens to "Submit Intent to Depart" and submit information regarding their intent to leave the U.S. They can also provide information to verify they have left the U.S., a function limited to those who were paroled into the U.S.

 

"The CBP Home App gives aliens the option to leave now and self-deport, so they may still have the opportunity to return legally in the future and live the American dream. If they don’t, we will find them, we will deport them, and they will never return," Noem said.

 

The Trump administration has moved rapidly to expand deportations and also cut the number of migrants entering the U.S., including via humanitarian parole, which dramatically expanded under the Biden administration.

 

Trump ended the use of the CBP One app to parole migrants on his first day in office. His administration has also paused applications for parole programs, and allowed ICE to cancel parole statuses of migrants.

 

Last month, Noem ended the use of CBP One to allow migrants to board domestic flights, unless it is being used for their self-deportation. The administration has also canceled extensions for Temporary Protected Status for some nationalities.

 

Meanwhile, the administration has touted a sharp drop in migrant crossings at the southern border.

 

"They heard my words, and they chose not to come, much easier that way," Trump told a joint session of Congress last week.

 

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/leave-now-trump-admin-repurposes-controversial-cbp-one-app-encourage-self-deportations

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:12 p.m. No.22739506   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9592 >>9634

CIA begins DOGE-inspired purge of employees as they get summoned to off-site location to 'surrender' badges

 

The latest newly hired probationary federal workers hit with a wave of layoffs is the Central Intelligence Agency.

 

CIA officers hired within the last two years are being summoned to off-site locations, fired and forced to surrender their badges to security personnel, three people briefing on the layoffs told The New York Times.

 

President Donald Trump said that agencies would begin initiating their own cuts and firings inspired by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) actions over the first month of his second term.

 

And the CIA under Director John Ratcliffe wasted no time getting to work on trimming down their workforce under Trump's orders.

 

It's not clear how many officers were let go so far and how many will lose their jobs.

 

People familiar with the effort, however, insist not all recent hires and probationary employees will be dismissed.

 

The reduction in CIA workforce came after a judge cleared the way for Ratcliffe to fire employees at will.

 

Judge Anthony J. Trenga of the Eastern District of Virginia ruled on a lawsuit brought by CIA officers who were assigned to the diversity and recruiting efforts under the previous administration.

 

They were removed under Trump's order to get rid of any diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs or department within the federal government.

 

But Judge Trenga'a ruling was sweeping and gave Director Ratcliffe the power to remove any CIA officer for any reason – without giving them a right of appeal.

 

This rejected defendants arguments that the workers were being denied their 14th Amendment right to due process as well violations of their free speech rights under the First Amendment.

 

CIA general counsel approved Ratcliffe's efforts to shrink the agency after reviewing the ruling.

 

Kevin Carroll, an attorney representing fired agency officers, said Judge Trenga strongly recommended Ratcliffe allow fired employees to appeal termination.

 

'Literally millions of dollars has been put into some of these probationary employees,' Mr. Carroll said.

 

Officers selected for the firings were summoned, without given reason, to a location away from CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia and told to hand over their credentials to access the building.

 

A spokeswoman confirmed that officers hired in the past two years have been fired.

Some young agency employees are hesitant to even answer their phones because they are worried it will be security asking them to report to the off-site firing location, people briefed on the matter detailed to the Times.

 

Most employees facing the cuts are those who joined the CIA within the last two years as these individuals are the officers whose employment is being reviewed, a spokesperson said.

 

But other officials claim the firings are solely performance based.

 

Some say that fewer layoffs are conducted in high-interest areas like collecting information on the threat from China and on Mexican drug cartels.

 

Former officials claim that the removal of newly recruited officers would likely create gaps in the deeply important intelligence agency.

 

The first two years of a CIA officer's career usually involved intense training in areas like spy tradecraft, languages and other niche skills.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14468747/cia-doge-purge-firing-employees-site-surrender-badges.html

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:13 p.m. No.22739510   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9592 >>9634

Mexico dumps raw sewage into river used by San Diego residents

 

The newly-appointed administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Lee Zeldin, has acknowledged the Tijuana sewage crisis on social media, bringing renewed attention to a long-standing environmental issue affecting the U.S.-Mexico border region.

 

In a recent X post, Zeldin stated, "I was just briefed that Mexico is dumping large amounts of raw sewage into the Tijuana River, and it's now seeping into the U.S. This is unacceptable. Mexico must honor its commitments to control this pollution and sewage!"

 

The post comes days after Aguirre said she wrote a letter to Zeldin asking him to authorize a new review for Superfund status to "Unlock large-scale federal clean-up efforts."

 

Imperial Beach Mayor Paloma Aguirre responded positively to this development, saying, "It's incredibly meaningful that he is taking attention to this matter." She added, "The fact that there is an acknowledgment that this is a serious concern from the highest environmental protection authority of the land is incredibly hopeful."

 

This acknowledgment comes after years of efforts to draw federal attention to the issue. Mayor Aguirre revealed that she visited the White House three times last year alone, but "at the end of the day, we didn't get what mattered most, which was a state of emergency."

 

Last October, Aguirre and County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer submitted a petition to the EPA for a Superfund designation, which was denied. Aguirre expressed frustration, stating, "It was denied under the Biden administration based on data that was 6 years old. They didn't even take the time to come and take soil samples."

 

The mayor has now invited Zeldin to visit the South Bay to witness the situation firsthand. She remains cautiously optimistic, noting, "We've been promised things before and we haven't had action."

 

Aguirre emphasized the urgency of the situation, describing it as a "ticking time bomb" for public health in the South Bay. She stressed the need for immediate action, saying, "We need to put infrastructure on our side. We need to armor everything, so we prevent all of that waste from impacting us… we can't wait for Mexico to solve their issues."

 

As the community awaits further response from the EPA, Zeldin's social media post has breathed new life into the mission of finding solutions to the Tijuana River sewage crisis, potentially paving the way for more federal involvement and resources to address this pressing environmental and public health issue.

 

https://www.10news.com/news/south-bay/epa-administrator-tweets-about-tj-sewage-crisis

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:16 p.m. No.22739524   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9592 >>9634

Horror in Syria as 'naked women are paraded and shot dead': More than 1,000 killed in just two days

 

More than 1,000 Syrians have been killed in just two days in brutal revenge killings as the conflict-riddled nation is gripped by bloody clashes between its new rulers and loyalists of ousted President Bashar Assad.

 

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said in addition to 745 civilians, mostly killed in massacres, 125 government security force members and 148 militants with armed groups affiliated with Assad were killed.

 

It added that electricity and drinking water were cut off in large areas around the city of Latakia.

 

The violent clashes, which erupted Thursday, are some of the deadliest since Syria's conflict began 14 years ago, and marked a major escalation in the challenge to the new government in Damascus, three months after insurgents took authority after removing Assad from power.

 

Witnesses revealed how women were reportedly told to 'walk naked' before being shot dead amid horrifying scenes in Syria.

 

The government has said that they were responding to attacks from remnants of Assad's forces and blamed 'individual actions' for the rampant violence.

 

The revenge killings that were started by Sunni Muslim gunmen loyal to the government against members of Assad's minority Alawite sect are a major blow to Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the faction that led the overthrow of the former government.

 

Alawites made up a large part of Assad's support base for decades.

 

Residents of Baniyas, one of the towns worst hit by the violence, said bodies were strewn on the streets or left unburied in homes and on the roofs of buildings, and nobody was able to collect them.

 

One witness said that the gunmen prevented residents for hours from removing the bodies of five of their neighbors killed Friday at close range.

 

'They forcibly brought people down to the streets, then they lined them up and started shooting them,' a resident of Baniyasin told Sky News.

 

'They left nobody. They left nobody at all. The scene that I saw was pure horror; it's just indescribable,' he said.

 

The man also described how women were forced to 'walk naked' before being gunned down.

 

Ali Sheha, a 57-year-old resident of Baniyas who fled with his family and neighbors hours after the violence broke out Friday, said that at least 20 of his neighbors and colleagues in one neighborhood of Baniyas where Alawites lived, were killed, some of them in their shops, or in their homes.

 

Sheha called the attacks 'revenge killings' of the Alawite minority for the crimes committed by Assad's government.

 

Other residents said the gunmen included foreign fighters, and militants from neighboring villages and towns.

 

'It was very very bad. Bodies were on the streets,' as he was fleeing, Sheha said, speaking by phone from nearly 20 kilometers (12 miles) away from the city.

 

He said the gunmen were gathering less than 100 meters from his apartment building, firing randomly at homes and residents and in at least one incident he knows of, asked residents for their IDs to check their religion and their sect before killing them.

 

The Observatory's chief Rami Abdurrahman said revenge killings stopped early on Saturday.

 

'This was one of the biggest massacres during the Syrian conflict,' he said about the killings of Alawite civilians.

 

The previous figure given by the group was more than 200 dead. No official figures have been released.

 

Horrific footage shows the violent clashes, with one video showing street fighters exchanging gunfire.

 

The leaders of Syria's three main Christian churches issued a joint statement Saturday condemning 'massacres targeting innocent civilians', following reports of mass killings of Alawite civilians by the security forces.

 

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also said '532 Alawite civilians were killed in the coastal regions of Syria and the Latakia mountains by security forces and allied groups'.

 

'In recent days, Syria has witnessed a dangerous escalation of violence, brutality, and killings, resulting in attacks on innocent civilians, including women and children,' the joint statement said.

 

It was signed by the patriarchs of the Greek Orthodox, Syriac Orthodox and Melkite Greek Catholic Churches.

 

The reported killings on the Mediterranean coast - the heartland of the Alawite religious minority - was gripped by fighting between the country's new security forces and gunmen loyal to toppled president Bashar al-Assad.

 

Though the majority of Syria's Christians fled during the civil war that erupted in 2011, the city of Latakia, which has been hard hit by the latest violence, is home to a small Christian community.

 

'The Christian churches, while strongly condemning any act that threatens civil peace, denounce and condemn the massacres targeting innocent civilians, and call for an immediate end to these horrific acts, which stand in stark opposition to all human and moral values,' the statement said.

 

'The churches also call for the swift creation of conditions conducive to achieving national reconciliation among the Syrian people.'

 

They urged a 'transition to a state that… lays the foundation for a society based on equal citizenship and genuine partnership, free from the logic of vengeance and exclusion'.

 

The spiritual leader of Syria's Druze minority, Sheikh Hikmat al-Hajri, also called for an end to the violence.

 

'The flames that burn under sectarian slogans will burn all of Syria and its people,' he said in a statement.

 

Assad, himself an Alawite who sought to present himself as a protector of Syria's minorities, was ousted on December 8 in a lightning offensive led by the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham.

 

The group's leader Ahmed al-Sharaa has since been appointed Syria's interim president.

 

The new authorities have repeatedly promised an inclusive transition that protects the rights of religious minorities.

 

The Alawite heartland has nonetheless been gripped by fear of reprisals for the Assad family's brutal rule.

 

On Saturday morning, the bodies of 31 people killed in revenge attacks the day before in the central village of Tuwaym were laid to rest in a mass grave, residents said. They included nine children and four women, the residents said.

 

Lebanese legislator Haidar Nasser, who holds one of the two seats allocated to the Alawite sect in parliament, said people were fleeing to Lebanon. He did not have exact numbers.

 

Mr Nasser said many people were sheltering at the Russian air base in Hmeimim, adding that the international community should protect Alawites who are Syrian citizens loyal to their country. He said that since Assad's fall, many Alawites had been fired from their jobs and some former soldiers who reconciled with the new authorities were killed.

 

Under Assad, Alawites held top posts in the army and security agencies. The new government has blamed his loyalists for attacks against the country's new security forces over recent weeks.

 

The most recent clashes started when government forces tried to detain a wanted person near the coastal city of Jableh, and were ambushed by Assad loyalists, according to the Observatory.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14477201/Horror-Syria-naked-women-paraded-shot-dead-600-killed-deadly-violence-new-rulers-Assad-loyalists.html

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:19 p.m. No.22739533   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9592 >>9634

Ten Caribbean countries sign up for China Belt and Road

 

On December 2, 1823, President James Monroe gave his 7th State of the Union address before Congress, using the occasion to advance what would later become known as the Monroe Doctrine.

 

After a string of former Spanish colonies in the Americas declared their independence, Monroe said the United States would oppose further predation in the region from the European empires to preserve the newly emancipated states.

 

As American power exploded during the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Monroe Doctrine evolved and increasingly came to mean Washington's opposition to any potentially hostile foreign power establishing itself in the Americas. With this and a variety of more mercantile motives in mind, the U.S. made a series of military interventions in Latin America and the Caribbean.

 

However, the past few decades have seen a dramatic increase in Chinese economic and diplomatic influence across the region, with one foreign policy expert telling Newsweek that Beijing wants to "turn the Caribbean Sea into a Chinese lake."

 

There are also concerns that the cuts to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) imposed by President Donald Trump's administration since it took over in January could weaken American influence in the Caribbean.

 

One regional expert described the move to Newsweek as a "huge gift" to Beijing.

 

Newsweek reached out to the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the U.S. State Department for comment via email and online inquiry form, respectively.

 

China is by some margin the United States' chief geopolitical rival, having seen its economic strength explode over the past few decades. Data from the World Trade Organization showed the value of Chinese manufacturing experts hit $1.81 trillion in 2023, up 30 times on 2002, while America's global trade deficit was over $1.2 trillion.

 

Chinese trade with and investment in Central America and the Caribbean have expanded rapidly over the past few years. According to figures from the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Chinese trade with the Caribbean went from $1 billion in 2002 to $8 billion in 2019, when $6.1 billion worth of Chinese exports and $1.9 billion in imports were recorded.

 

The committee identified major Chinese projects, including the development of a $3 billion deep-water port on Grand Bahama, just 55 miles from the U.S. mainland, and a $600 million investment to improve the Dominican Republic's electricity grid. According to Forbes, China is funding $2.1 billion worth of projects in Jamaica and $773 million in Suriname.

 

As of 2022, ten Caribbean countries had signed up to Beijing's Belt and Road Initiative, a major Chinese economic program that critics argue is a Trojan horse for geopolitical ambitions: Cuba, Suriname, Guyana, Trinidad & Tobago, Grenada, Barbados, Dominica, Antigua & Barbuda, Dominican Republic and Jamaica.

 

Speaking to Newsweek, Evan Ellis, a research professor at the U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute who specializes in the relationship between Latin America and China, said that while individual Chinese companies primarily have commercial objectives, Beijing is keeping a close eye on the wider strategic picture.

 

"Although I don't believe that Chinese companies pursue presence in the region principally because of the military value, the military opportunities that such commercial presence, and political and military relationships potentially provide in time of war, is obvious to the People's Liberation Army and the Chinese government," Ellis said.

 

Ellis added, "On a per capita basis, there is no other part of the Western Hemisphere that receives the quantity of trips for its police and defense force officials two Chinese military institutions, gifts of police and military vehicles and material, visits by Chinese hospital ships, and other [People's Liberation Army] military diplomacy as does the Caribbean."

 

Alan Mendoza, executive director of the London-based security think tank the Henry Jackson Society, told Newsweek that Beijing is actively seeking to challenge the U.S. in the Caribbean.

 

"China appears intent on trying to turn the Caribbean Sea into a Chinese lake with its strategic investments and attempts to secure influence in the region," Mendoza said. "The Trump administration could easily employ a carrot and stick approach to roll this back however, by offering trade and investment inducements of its own while making clear the consequences of ignoring a generous offer."

 

John Lee, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute think tank who served as a senior national security adviser to the Australian foreign minister between 2016 and 2018, told Newsweek that Chinese activities raise a "threefold" threat to U.S. influence in the Caribbean and Latin America.

 

"First, increased economic, financial, and technological dependency on China offers Beijing opportunity to exert influence in the geopolitical decisions and even domestic politics of smaller states…Second, China seeks to redefine and change the rules and standards used by nations to conduct commerce and trade in its favor," Lee said.

 

"Third, Chinese development and operation of ports in foreign countries has been used by Beijing to gather significant military and economic intelligence for the purposes of aiding China in its geopolitical rivalry with the U.S."

 

Chinese President Xi Jinping has described the unification of Taiwan, an island democracy of 23 million that Beijing regards as a renegade province, with mainland China as "inevitable" and has refused to rule out using force to resolve the issue.

 

In an interview with Newsweek, Christopher Sabatini, a Latin America specialist at the London-based Chatham House think tank, said the intensity of China's involvement in the Caribbean and Central America has partly been an attempt to persuade countries to break off relations with Taiwan.

 

"If you look at before the recent flurry of diplomatic initiatives, the countries that were recognizing Taiwan, the overwhelming majority of them were in the Caribbean and Central America so it was an obvious target for their efforts if you will, economic and diplomatic," Sabatini said.

 

In 2018, Panama and the Dominican Republic cut their long-standing diplomatic ties with Taiwan, followed by Nicaragua in 2021.

 

Sabatini said China had a "long-term strategy of lining up countries that would support it in multilateral organizations," adding, "It wasn't an immediate military threat…there was a larger long-term plan of picking a team, stacking up chips."

 

Ellis made a similar point: "Five of the 12 countries in the world that recognize Taiwan rather than the [People's Republic of China] are found in the Caribbean basin at a moment in which eliminating Taiwan's sources of international legitimacy is of increased importance to President Xi Jinping."

 

Chinese influence has increased significantly around the strategically vital Panama Canal over the past couple of decades, with two of the five ports near its entrance being run by Hong Kong-based companies. This has infuriated Trump, who has vowed to restore the canal to American ownership, which was handed over in 1999 following a 1977 treaty.

 

Speaking at his inauguration in January, Trump said, "Above all, China is operating the Panama Canal. And we didn't give it to China. We gave it to Panama, and we're taking it back."

 

Trump has also refused to rule out using force to regain control over the canal.

 

Ellis said China's influence around the canal could "give the Chinese opportunities to interrupt canal traffic in time of war, whether by physical or electronic attacks on locks, disabling a large ship in the Culebra Cut, mining the canal, or other activities."

 

However, Sabatini warned against overestimating the threat from Chinese-owned ports near the canal, commenting, "The truth is much of that intelligence that could have been gathered could equally have been gathered by satellite imagery or even by setting up listening posts. These were not insidious outposts of Chinese military influence."

 

In a victory for the U.S. president earlier this month, CK Hutchison Holdings, the Hong Kong-based company that owned two ports by the Panama Canal, announced it had sold them to an American BlackRock-led acquisition in a $23 billion deal.

 

There has also been a surge in the number of encounters between suspected Chinese illegal migrants and U.S. law enforcement on both the Mexican and Canadian borders.

 

According to a May 2024 report by the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and Accountability, the figure surged from 1,970 in the 2022 fiscal year to 24,376 two years later. Trump has made cracking down on illegal immigration one of his main policy priorities.

 

Sabatini told Newsweek that China views mass migration via the southern border, via failed states in Latin America and the Caribbean, as a way of tying down American resources that could otherwise be deployed elsewhere.

 

"In the case of Haiti, or other failed states, China and Russia are more than happy to see those states continue to just collapse to send migrants, to send insecurity and drugs to the United States," Sabatini said.

 

"So they don't actually have to militarily intervene. They've got a number of dumpster fires basically on the doorstep of the United States. Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba, and of course Haiti now."

 

In the event of open war between the U.S. and China, Sabatini said: "What they're counting on Latin America for is being able to lock down a theater of operations…what they're looking to do is make sure they can lock up the U.S. on the southern border. We're not talking about an invasion, we're talking about reducing the operations of the United States in the theater of conflict."

 

The Trump administration has slashed staffing at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) chief Elon Musk has indicated that it will be closed down altogether.

 

According to the Congressional Research Service, the Biden administration requested $2.2 billion in USAID assistance for the Caribbean and Latin America in the 2025 fiscal year, so these cuts could significantly impact U.S. influence in the region.

 

Sabatini said this will reduce U.S. influence in the Caribbean and Central America to the benefit of rivals like China, describing the move as "an own goal" and a "huge gift" to Beijing.

 

He said the move "sends a signal that the U.S. simply isn't interested in extending a hand" and that China will likely move to "take advantage."

 

He also noted that civil society groups, such as independent media and educational organizations, in authoritarian Beijing-friendly countries such as Nicaragua, Cuba and Venezuela have been big recipients of USAID.

 

"That's now disappeared," Sabatini said. "Now, none of those NGOs that were receiving money are going to suddenly embrace the Chinese but [cutting] that money did just hand the Chinese a huge gift because those are Chinese allies…It's an own goal; they gave the field to the autocrats."

 

Lee agreed that the U.S. will struggle to contain Chinese influence in the Caribbean and Latin America without seeking to make a positive contribution to the region.

 

"There is no point worrying about increased Chinese leverage if these countries are not given alternatives in the form of ready access to fair rates of finance and market access," Lee said. "The Trump administration will need to balance legitimate concerns about unimpeded access to its domestic economy with these geopolitical concerns."

 

Professor Eric Hershberg, an expert in Latin American politics who used to teach at the American University in Washington, D.C., told Newsweek that China's growing influence was partly a response to the U.S.'s failure to provide what the Caribbean and Central America need.

 

"Despite intermittent pledges to partner with countries in the region around these needs, the U.S. government has not been a reliable source of access to major investment, and though substantial in some cases neither U.S. trade nor U.S. assistance to the region even remotely approximates what is needed in order for these countries to do minimally well," Hershberg said.

 

"In this context, the substantial commitments made by Chinese investors in recent years, particularly in infrastructure, have been vital to prospects for prosperity in Central America and the Caribbean."

 

https://www.newsweek.com/us-warned-caribbean-becoming-chinese-lake-2041296

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:23 p.m. No.22739549   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Saudi Arabia’s Futuristic Hyped 'Line City' Metropolis in the Desert Is A Flop

 

It was supposed to be a launch party for the new Saudi Arabia.

Will Smith, Tom Brady and other celebrities gathered on a sandy island in the Red Sea packed with luxury hotels. Superyachts floated nearby while Alicia Keys played for business executives who had flown in from London and New York. Spotlights blared into the night sky.

The October event was the lavish opening of the first part of Neom, a planned metropolis defined by cutting-edge technology and psychedelic architecture, a cornerstone of the country’s plan to pivot its economy away from oil.

The truth for the project was less glamorous.

The relatively simple, low-rise development, known as Sindalah, was over three years late and on track to cost nearly $4 billion, three times its initial budget. Hotels were unfinished, high winds disrupted ferries and golf, and much of the site was still under construction.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Neom’s mastermind, was a surprise no-show. Neom board documents say the party cost at least $45 million. Many Neom staff viewed his absence as a sign of disapproval.

Weeks later, Neom’s boss of six years, a former crown prince favorite, left the project and a new crew of executives was installed to turn Neom around.

 

After spending more than $50 billion, the crown prince’s sci-fi-inspired dreams—an arid-mountain ski resort, a floating business district, and the Line, the 106-mile-long pair of Empire State Building-height skyscrapers that is Neom’s centerpiece—have collided with reality.

Costs have soared, delays are ubiquitous and a decision last year to reduce Neom’s first phase threatens to deprive the desert city of the critical mass of inhabitants needed to make it a modern business hub.

Behind Neom’s problems: a dance of mutual delusion in which the crown prince pushed for fantastical plans—and executives shielded him from the full scope of challenges and costs, according to former employees and a more than 100-page internal audit of the project presented to members of Neom’s board last spring and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The audit report, labeled “final draft,” found that executives, at times aided by the project’s longtime consultants, McKinsey & Co., plugged unrealistically rosy assumptions into Neom’s business plan to justify rising cost estimates. The audit found “evidence of deliberate manipulation” of finances by “certain members of management.”

In a sign of the massive ambitions of the project, a draft board presentation from last summer pegged the capital expenditure required to build Neom to its “end-state” by 2080 at $8.8 trillion—more than 25 times the annual Saudi budget—and $370 billion for its first phase by 2035. The Saudi state is funding the lion’s share of Neom’s initial costs, although officials hope private investors will eventually share the burden.

 

A Neom spokeswoman said the Journal was “incorrectly interpreting” and misrepresenting the figures. She declined to provide additional detail.

Neom “champions excellence, professionalism, diversity and ethical conduct,” she said, and has policies requiring staff to uphold those values. The project’s “priorities are intact and the project remains on track, demonstrating tangible progress,” she said, adding that schedule and cost adjustments are common practice for large projects.

The Saudi government didn’t respond to questions about Neom or the crown prince’s involvement in the project.

A McKinsey spokesman said the firm ensures “compliance with the rules that govern international commerce.” He said any claim that it “has been involved in the manipulation of financial reporting is false.”

Saudi officials have begun referring to Neom as a generational investment that will bear fruit in decades to come—dropping descriptions that cast it as an economic engine starting in 2030. The country has long said its economic plan, Vision 2030, was filled with highly ambitious targets. Even accomplishing a portion would be a success, officials have said.

Other parts of the crown prince’s economic plan have transformed the country. Millions of women have joined the labor force. The private sector has grown to contribute nearly half of Saudi’s gross domestic product, according to the International Monetary Fund, and smaller megaprojects in Riyadh have made faster and more visible progress.

Neom, however, was meant to be the anchor. Launched in 2017, the concept was to build from scratch an international hub with fewer social and legal strictures than the rest of Saudi Arabia.

 

The crown prince compared the project to Egypt’s pyramids. He said it would mark a “civilizational revolution” and hold nine million people by 2045.

The crown prince chairs the boards of Neom and sub-boards of all of the projects within it, and his approval is frequently needed for architectural choices. A fan of videogames and sci-fi movies, the crown prince pushed the idea of “zero gravity” architecture that looks like it defies physics, some of the former employees said.

A feature known as the chandelier—essentially an empty glass building more than 30 stories tall—is planned to hang upside down from a giant steel bridge in the Line. It was designed by Marvel film designer Olivier Pron, who was brought in because staff knew the prince liked his movies, some of the former employees said.

Neom executives made plans to build 10 miles of the Line by 2030. This meant constructing the equivalent of all the office buildings in Midtown Manhattan three times over in a decade. It would require significant portions of the world’s available steel and window glass.

Costs would be a challenge. The remote construction site had virtually no labor, no sizable port, few roads and insufficient electricity. The design involved an amusement park built 1,000 feet up and theaters suspended in the air between the parallel towers.

They made the numbers work on paper by saying the Line would cost less a square foot than tall skyscrapers in Riyadh, some of the former employees said. Planners assumed economies of scale would bring prices down.

Former managers and executives within Neom said they routinely considered projections completely unrealistic. Some refused to sign documents attesting to aggressive schedules and targets. Plans were pushed ahead regardless.

The original architect of the Line, Thom Mayne of Los Angeles-based firm Morphosis, wanted to express concerns to the crown prince about the Line’s high costs. Neom executives rejected his requests, according to one of the former employees.

Bids on early work from contractors ran high. One way executives hid rising costs was to beef up profit assumptions, according to the internal audit and some of the former employees.

The crown prince encouraged Neom to use a commonly used investment metric known as the internal rate of return, essentially the percentage of an investment that comes back in annual profit. If a hotel costs $1 million to build, and is worth $1.1 million a year later, it would have an IRR of 10%.

At Trojena, the planned ski resort, a fall 2023 review found that costs had surged by over $10 billion, according to an internal presentation reviewed by the Journal. That caused the IRR to fall to 7%, below the project’s target of around 9%.

 

To cover the gap, estimates for the rate at an “inventive glamping” site were readjusted to $704 a night, up from $216, according to the presentation. A “boutique hiking hotel” room was pegged at $1,866 a night, up from $489. The changes helped to push the IRR up to 9.3%.

The audit said Antoni Vives, who oversaw the broad vision at Neom and then ran Sindalah, justified rising costs with higher assumptions on revenue, rather than reassessing them as too expensive. He told colleagues and McKinsey consultants in an email before a key meeting that “we must not proactively mention cost at all.”

Dissent was also quashed. A Sindalah project manager was “removed after they challenged cost estimates,” the internal audit report found.

An attorney for Vives said that work at Neom “was done with total honesty and with the ambition that the project demands, in addition to absolute loyalty to the leadership of the country.”

McKinsey helped to create “models to help improve the IRR calculation,” the audit said. The firm validated financial projections for Sindalah after a separate adviser refused to do so, according to the audit.

 

The auditors recommended further investigation into potential conflicts of interest because McKinsey served both in planning and in validating the projects.

McKinsey’s fees at Neom have topped $130 million in a single year, according to people familiar with the fees.

The McKinsey spokesman said the firm has “strict protocols to prevent conflicts of interest in our engagements.” He added McKinsey was “not responsible for Sindalah’s integrated financial reporting.”

The Neom spokeswoman said the organization has “improved its internal controls and governance, particularly around procurement and managing third parties.”

A key driver of costs has been the Line’s 1,640-foot height. Engineering and construction challenges make it hard to build profitable supertall towers anywhere, let alone in the remote desert. Neom staff repeatedly urged executives to reduce the height to around 1,000 feet to save on costs.

At a Neom board meeting last spring, the crown prince “clarified the inappropriateness of reducing the height” of the tower, board minutes show. Cost savings should be found elsewhere, he said.

The head of the country’s wealth fund, Yasir Al-Rumayyan, suggested instead to use “new technologies to reduce the labor force.”

Officials mothballed the portion of a rail line that involved digging an 18-mile tunnel through a mountain. They delayed the first piece of the Line, which had already been reduced to 1½ miles from 10 miles planned earlier. The current aim is to open the first half-mile chunk—topped by a stadium to host World Cup matches—by 2034.

 

“We’ll start to go vertical—hopefully—at the end of this year,” Denis Hickey, who oversees the development of the Line, said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January.

At Sindalah, the island resort remains unfinished. Restaurant workers have been reading books to pass the time without guests to serve, people who worked at the resort say. The golf course and hotels, four months after the party, still aren’t open to the public.

 

https://archive.is/PxcBX#selection-3049.0-3053.262

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:24 p.m. No.22739558   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9592 >>9634

Suspects in LA murder of good Samaritan who tried to stop catalytic converter theft were in country illegally

 

Two murder suspects who allegedly killed a good Samaritan in Los Angeles County while he was attempting to stop them from stealing his neighbor’s catalytic converter were in the country illegally and have lengthy criminal records, Fox News has learned.

 

Wilber Alberto Rabanales and Jose Christian Saravia Sanchez were arrested by police in the Los Angeles suburb of Inglewood Thursday for the Feb. 25 murder of Juan Miguel Sanchez.

 

The incident was caught on surveillance video.

 

Rabanales, a Guatemalan national, has been arrested at least 15 times in the last few years in the county, predominantly on gun charges, grand theft, burglary and drug charges, police sources told Fox News.

 

He has multiple grand theft arrests, mostly for stealing catalytic converters, and past charges for multiple DUIs, conspiracy, felon in possession of a gun, possession of burglary tools, possession of meth, possession of stolen property and felony hit-and-run during a police pursuit.

 

Sanchez has been arrested at least a dozen times, mostly for grand theft, gun charges, drugs, burglary, kidnapping, possession of meth and possession of burglary tools, the sources said.

 

Fox News Digital has reached out to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

 

The victim was shot in the chest after he confronted the suspects while they were allegedly attempting to steal the catalytic converter, FOX 11 reported.

 

The suspects escaped in a car and were later arrested at a motel in Cudahy, California, about 15 miles east of Inglewood.

 

The victim’s sister, Susana Sanchez, said he would have turned 49 April 4.

 

"You took a big part of our heart," she said in an interview with FOX 11.

 

His family told the station he had left for work before 4 a.m. that morning because he wanted to get an early start at his job, where he had just been promoted while working to clean up after the Palisades Fire.

 

"He was a big man of faith, never missed mass on Sunday," his sister said. "He volunteered on Sunday mornings at church."

 

She added that he was the sole provider for his family.

 

"And now he’s gone, leaving my sister-in-law and two sons," she added.

 

The family told FOX 11 the victim had told his wife she should leave her job while she underwent chemotherapy after being diagnosed with cancer.

 

https://www.foxnews.com/us/la-murder-suspects-good-samaritan-who-tried-stop-catalytic-converter-theft-were-country-illegally

Anonymous ID: 074025 March 10, 2025, 10:25 p.m. No.22739560   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9592 >>9634

Saudi Arabia’s Futuristic Hyped 'Line City' Metropolis in the Desert Is A Flop

 

It was supposed to be a launch party for the new Saudi Arabia.

 

Will Smith, Tom Brady and other celebrities gathered on a sandy island in the Red Sea packed with luxury hotels. Superyachts floated nearby while Alicia Keys played for business executives who had flown in from London and New York. Spotlights blared into the night sky.

 

The October event was the lavish opening of the first part of Neom, a planned metropolis defined by cutting-edge technology and psychedelic architecture, a cornerstone of the country’s plan to pivot its economy away from oil.

 

The truth for the project was less glamorous.

 

The relatively simple, low-rise development, known as Sindalah, was over three years late and on track to cost nearly $4 billion, three times its initial budget. Hotels were unfinished, high winds disrupted ferries and golf, and much of the site was still under construction.

 

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Neom’s mastermind, was a surprise no-show. Neom board documents say the party cost at least $45 million. Many Neom staff viewed his absence as a sign of disapproval.

 

Weeks later, Neom’s boss of six years, a former crown prince favorite, left the project and a new crew of executives was installed to turn Neom around.

 

After spending more than $50 billion, the crown prince’s sci-fi-inspired dreams—an arid-mountain ski resort, a floating business district, and the Line, the 106-mile-long pair of Empire State Building-height skyscrapers that is Neom’s centerpiece—have collided with reality.

 

Costs have soared, delays are ubiquitous and a decision last year to reduce Neom’s first phase threatens to deprive the desert city of the critical mass of inhabitants needed to make it a modern business hub.

 

Behind Neom’s problems: a dance of mutual delusion in which the crown prince pushed for fantastical plans—and executives shielded him from the full scope of challenges and costs, according to former employees and a more than 100-page internal audit of the project presented to members of Neom’s board last spring and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

 

The audit report, labeled “final draft,” found that executives, at times aided by the project’s longtime consultants, McKinsey & Co., plugged unrealistically rosy assumptions into Neom’s business plan to justify rising cost estimates. The audit found “evidence of deliberate manipulation” of finances by “certain members of management.”

 

In a sign of the massive ambitions of the project, a draft board presentation from last summer pegged the capital expenditure required to build Neom to its “end-state” by 2080 at $8.8 trillion—more than 25 times the annual Saudi budget—and $370 billion for its first phase by 2035. The Saudi state is funding the lion’s share of Neom’s initial costs, although officials hope private investors will eventually share the burden.

 

A Neom spokeswoman said the Journal was “incorrectly interpreting” and misrepresenting the figures. She declined to provide additional detail.

 

Neom “champions excellence, professionalism, diversity and ethical conduct,” she said, and has policies requiring staff to uphold those values. The project’s “priorities are intact and the project remains on track, demonstrating tangible progress,” she said, adding that schedule and cost adjustments are common practice for large projects.

 

The Saudi government didn’t respond to questions about Neom or the crown prince’s involvement in the project.

 

A McKinsey spokesman said the firm ensures “compliance with the rules that govern international commerce.” He said any claim that it “has been involved in the manipulation of financial reporting is false.”

 

Saudi officials have begun referring to Neom as a generational investment that will bear fruit in decades to come—dropping descriptions that cast it as an economic engine starting in 2030. The country has long said its economic plan, Vision 2030, was filled with highly ambitious targets. Even accomplishing a portion would be a success, officials have said.

 

Other parts of the crown prince’s economic plan have transformed the country. Millions of women have joined the labor force. The private sector has grown to contribute nearly half of Saudi’s gross domestic product, according to the International Monetary Fund, and smaller megaprojects in Riyadh have made faster and more visible progress.

 

Neom, however, was meant to be the anchor. Launched in 2017, the concept was to build from scratch an international hub with fewer social and legal strictures than the rest of Saudi Arabia.

 

The crown prince compared the project to Egypt’s pyramids. He said it would mark a “civilizational revolution” and hold nine million people by 2045.

 

The crown prince chairs the boards of Neom and sub-boards of all of the projects within it, and his approval is frequently needed for architectural choices. A fan of videogames and sci-fi movies, the crown prince pushed the idea of “zero gravity” architecture that looks like it defies physics, some of the former employees said.

 

A feature known as the chandelier—essentially an empty glass building more than 30 stories tall—is planned to hang upside down from a giant steel bridge in the Line. It was designed by Marvel film designer Olivier Pron, who was brought in because staff knew the prince liked his movies, some of the former employees said.

 

Neom executives made plans to build 10 miles of the Line by 2030. This meant constructing the equivalent of all the office buildings in Midtown Manhattan three times over in a decade. It would require significant portions of the world’s available steel and window glass.

 

Costs would be a challenge. The remote construction site had virtually no labor, no sizable port, few roads and insufficient electricity. The design involved an amusement park built 1,000 feet up and theaters suspended in the air between the parallel towers.

 

They made the numbers work on paper by saying the Line would cost less a square foot than tall skyscrapers in Riyadh, some of the former employees said. Planners assumed economies of scale would bring prices down.

 

Former managers and executives within Neom said they routinely considered projections completely unrealistic. Some refused to sign documents attesting to aggressive schedules and targets. Plans were pushed ahead regardless.

 

The original architect of the Line, Thom Mayne of Los Angeles-based firm Morphosis, wanted to express concerns to the crown prince about the Line’s high costs. Neom executives rejected his requests, according to one of the former employees.

 

Bids on early work from contractors ran high. One way executives hid rising costs was to beef up profit assumptions, according to the internal audit and some of the former employees.

 

The crown prince encouraged Neom to use a commonly used investment metric known as the internal rate of return, essentially the percentage of an investment that comes back in annual profit. If a hotel costs $1 million to build, and is worth $1.1 million a year later, it would have an IRR of 10%.

 

At Trojena, the planned ski resort, a fall 2023 review found that costs had surged by over $10 billion, according to an internal presentation reviewed by the Journal. That caused the IRR to fall to 7%, below the project’s target of around 9%.

 

To cover the gap, estimates for the rate at an “inventive glamping” site were readjusted to $704 a night, up from $216, according to the presentation. A “boutique hiking hotel” room was pegged at $1,866 a night, up from $489. The changes helped to push the IRR up to 9.3%.

 

The audit said Antoni Vives, who oversaw the broad vision at Neom and then ran Sindalah, justified rising costs with higher assumptions on revenue, rather than reassessing them as too expensive. He told colleagues and McKinsey consultants in an email before a key meeting that “we must not proactively mention cost at all.”

 

Dissent was also quashed. A Sindalah project manager was “removed after they challenged cost estimates,” the internal audit report found.

 

An attorney for Vives said that work at Neom “was done with total honesty and with the ambition that the project demands, in addition to absolute loyalty to the leadership of the country.”

 

McKinsey helped to create “models to help improve the IRR calculation,” the audit said. The firm validated financial projections for Sindalah after a separate adviser refused to do so, according to the audit.

 

The auditors recommended further investigation into potential conflicts of interest because McKinsey served both in planning and in validating the projects.

 

McKinsey’s fees at Neom have topped $130 million in a single year, according to people familiar with the fees.

 

The McKinsey spokesman said the firm has “strict protocols to prevent conflicts of interest in our engagements.” He added McKinsey was “not responsible for Sindalah’s integrated financial reporting.”

 

The Neom spokeswoman said the organization has “improved its internal controls and governance, particularly around procurement and managing third parties.”

 

A key driver of costs has been the Line’s 1,640-foot height. Engineering and construction challenges make it hard to build profitable supertall towers anywhere, let alone in the remote desert. Neom staff repeatedly urged executives to reduce the height to around 1,000 feet to save on costs.

 

At a Neom board meeting last spring, the crown prince “clarified the inappropriateness of reducing the height” of the tower, board minutes show. Cost savings should be found elsewhere, he said.

 

The head of the country’s wealth fund, Yasir Al-Rumayyan, suggested instead to use “new technologies to reduce the labor force.”

 

Officials mothballed the portion of a rail line that involved digging an 18-mile tunnel through a mountain. They delayed the first piece of the Line, which had already been reduced to 1½ miles from 10 miles planned earlier. The current aim is to open the first half-mile chunk—topped by a stadium to host World Cup matches—by 2034.

 

“We’ll start to go vertical—hopefully—at the end of this year,” Denis Hickey, who oversees the development of the Line, said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January.

 

At Sindalah, the island resort remains unfinished. Restaurant workers have been reading books to pass the time without guests to serve, people who worked at the resort say. The golf course and hotels, four months after the party, still aren’t open to the public.

 

https://archive.is/PxcBX#selection-3049.0-3053.262